Strongest Rebirth: My Yandere Goddesses Broke The World For Me
Chapter 43: Want To Read His Mind???
"Now. Resources," Nyx said, shifting instantly back to business. Her headset pinged softly as she summoned a cascade of holographic inventory screens.
Zen crossed his arms. "I was about to bring that up."
"I know," Nyx said. "I ran the diagnostics on your mana signature the moment you stepped off the train." She swiped an inventory screen away with disgust. "D-Rank marrow-cleansing pills and a stabilization array would take weeks. I am not interested in weeks."
"I will have a cultivation chamber prepared for you immediately," Nyx said, stepping beside him and gesturing at the floating manifests. "C-Rank liquid mana, refined void-lotus extract, and a resonance array calibrated to your pre-Singularity core frequency."
She glanced at him with the expression of someone who has been waiting centuries to make exactly this offer. "Let me show you exactly how much better I am at providing for you than she is."
Ten minutes later, Zen was standing in the center of his new quarters.
The massive penthouse suite was built directly into the upper server architecture, its walls lined with purple data streams that flowed like rivers of light.
An enormous bed covered in dark silk sat nearby. And in the middle of the room, a cultivation pool sunk three feet into the polished floor was already filling with thick, glowing blue liquid mana.
Nyx stayed by the door, watching him closely as if she were noting every samll reaction he made.
"The local firewall is calibrated to mask your signature," she said. "Valerius is entirely blind to this domain. Rest. I have adjustments to make to your security clearance parameters." She paused. "I will check on you shortly."
The heavy metal doors sealed shut. 𝕗𝚛𝚎𝚎𝐰𝗲𝗯𝗻𝚘𝚟𝚎𝗹.𝕔𝐨𝕞
Zen stood in the quiet, listening to the locking mechanisms engage one by one.
He counted to thirty.
Then he sat down at the edge of the cultivation pool and turned his attention inward.
"System," he said quietly. "We are inside her network. Assess the local architecture."
[PROBABILITY SYSTEM — ACTIVE.]
[Calculating probable network layout based on observable data patterns, ambient signal density, and architectural inference from physical surroundings...]
[Confidence level: 71%. This is an estimate. I cannot actively scan. I am a probability engine, not a surveillance tool.]
Zen paused.
The System’s limitation was something he had been working around for weeks... treating its inferences as certainties when they were really educated guesses dressed up in brackets.
In the Ares Academy, that gap hadn’t mattered much.
Here, inside the most sophisticated surveillance architecture on the planet, a 71% confidence estimate was going to get him killed.
"And the Shadow fragment?" he asked.
[Calculating probable location based on mana resonance proximity and host behavioral patterns...]
[High probability: Integrated directly into host’s biological core. Fragment is not externally stored. Dual Cultivation remains the only viable transfer method. Confidence: 89%.]
He noted the 11% uncertainty.
In Ares, he had trusted System assessments as if they were facts. He was going to have to stop doing that.
"What do you actually know versus what are you guessing?" Zen asked.
[Honest assessment: I calculate probability distributions from the information available to me. I don’t scan or hack; I simply infer. This distinction is minor in low-information environments. However, even though you are now sitting inside the Omni Domain Central Servers... the most information-dense environment on the planet, I am still only guessing.]
[Recommendation: Acknowledge the limitation. Plan accordingly.]
Zen sat with this for a moment.
Then he stepped down into the cultivation pool. The liquid mana closed around him and his pathways began to expand almost immediately, the micro-tears from the train absorption sealing under the C-Rank density.
He had been in the pool for approximately twenty minutes when the door opened.
He hadn’t heard the locks disengage. Which meant Nyx had overridden them manually, which meant she had been watching his biosigns and chosen this specific moment deliberately.
"You are frowning," Nyx observed from the doorway. She was carrying a small piece of hardware; a flat, hexagonal device about the size of his palm, etched with a dense weave of micro-runes.
"You have been frowning since you closed your eyes. Your mana activity has been spiking and dropping in irregular bursts, like someone running calculations and not liking the results."
Zen looked at her. "You are reading my bioscan."
"I am always reading your bioscan," Nyx said simply.
She set the hexagonal device down on the pool’s edge and crouched beside it. "You have always done this. Even back then, when you were working through a problem you could not solve, your mana rhythm would stall and restart in exactly this pattern."
She looked at the device rather than at him. "Your mind is hitting walls it cannot see past. You are working with incomplete information and you know it."
"And you have a solution," Zen said.
"I have a bridge," Nyx corrected. "You are the most tactically intelligent person I have ever known, but right now you are calculating blind... processing only what you personally observe, limited to what your own senses can reach."
She finally looked at him. "That bridge node contains a passive receiver array. If I attach it to your cultivation chamber’s resonance field, you can pull real-time environmental data directly from my network. Your mind would have access to everything I can see."
Zen looked at the device. "You want to plug my brain into your surveillance grid."
"I want to give you windows," Nyx said. "You have been locked in a room since your return to this world. Let me open the walls."
"And what do you get from this?" Zen asked.
Nyx offered a smile... the most genuine one he’d seen since the platform. It was honest only because she didn’t try to hide the calculation behind it.
"A passive monitoring feed," she said. "If your mind is interfaced with my network, I can see your processing outputs in real-time. I will know what threats you have assessed. What odds you are running. What you consider dangerous."
She tilted her head slightly. "It is the most intimate form of intelligence I can imagine. I would know how you think."
Zen looked at the device. Then at Nyx.
"You want to read my mind," he said.
"I want to understand you," Nyx said. "I have wanted that for five hundred years. This is the most efficient method available."
Zen reached out and picked up the bridge node, turning it over in his hand.
The micro-runes were beautifully crafted, representing Lyra’s original Aether architecture refined over five centuries by Nyx.
Even with the modern updates, Zen could still recognize the bones of the design.
He did not set it down yet.
"System," Zen said internally, keeping his face completely neutral for Nyx’s benefit. "She believes she is interfacing with my mind directly. If I allow her to attach the bridge node, what’s the probability of successful absorption versus catastrophic failure."
[Calculating...]
[Variable 1: The bridge node was engineered to interface with human cognitive mana patterns. It was not built to contain or resist a Void fragment. Nyx does not know what she is actually attaching to.]
[Variable 2: A hook designed for a human mind attempting to interface with a Void fragment is structurally similar to a net designed to catch fish being dropped into open water. The net functions. The water simply passes through it and keeps the current.]
[Variable 3: Risk of catastrophic failure exists only if the absorbed architecture is fundamentally incompatible with Void consumption patterns. Nyx’s network is built on Lyra’s original Aether rune-base pre-Singularity architecture. Compatibility is high.]
[Variable 4: Her monitoring hook will be detected and rejected. This is not a risk. This is a certainty. The question is whether rejection triggers a cascade that damages the bridge before the upgrade completes.]
[Calculating final distribution...]
[Probability of successful upgrade: 73%.]
[Probability of catastrophic failure: 19%.]
[Probability of partial integration with degraded function: 8%.]
Zen looked at the numbers for exactly two seconds.
Seventy-three percent.
In Ares he had charged a D-Rank boss with 5% survival odds and walked out with a Heart-Stone. He had stood in front of the Inquisitor’s soul-measuring stone at 0% deception probability and walked out clean.
Seventy-three percent was practically a guarantee.
He set the bridge node back down on the pool’s edge.
"Do it," he said.